Driving to Southern Spain - quiet dog friendly places
Driving to Southern Spain - quiet dog friendly places
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JEA1K

Original Poster:

2,648 posts

242 months

Friday 14th November
quotequote all
We're going to take our dogs down to Spain next month as we're planning a 3 week ish trip. We're up in York, so looks like its 25 hours without stops, so we'll do this over a couple of days.

Rough plan us to leave York early hours, get a 6am chunnel crossing and do a long first day around Poitiers for the first night in a hotel. Day 2 drive from Poitiers to Burgos area with another overnight stay before heading to Nerja from Burgos. Had orginally planned one night stop but I think 15 hours each day will be a bit much.

Looks like most of the Ibis hotels are pet friendly, I just wanted to see who's done similar journeys with their dogs before and any pointers as to where to stay?

Voodoo Blue

1,060 posts

164 months

Friday 14th November
quotequote all
We took our 2 dogs with us down to a friend's villa near Valencia in September '23.

Because we weren't on the clock we took 5 days to go down and a week to come back avoiding Autoroutes etc. where possible. The first thing I'd say is if you can spend a bit of time driving some of the back roads through the Pyrenees it's well worth the effort as the scenery is stunning especially if you can head to or from Carcassonne which is also worth a visit.

As for accommodation, we ended up using the Accor website for most of our overnights as they have a dog filter which shows all the hotels in a given area that are dog friendly and those we used were all very clean, welcoming and not overly expensive.

If you want any specific information on where we stayed and the route we took please let me know.

JEA1K

Original Poster:

2,648 posts

242 months

Friday 14th November
quotequote all
Voodoo Blue said:
We took our 2 dogs with us down to a friend's villa near Valencia in September '23.

Because we weren't on the clock we took 5 days to go down and a week to come back avoiding Autoroutes etc. where possible. The first thing I'd say is if you can spend a bit of time driving some of the back roads through the Pyrenees it's well worth the effort as the scenery is stunning especially if you can head to or from Carcassonne which is also worth a visit.

As for accommodation, we ended up using the Accor website for most of our overnights as they have a dog filter which shows all the hotels in a given area that are dog friendly and those we used were all very clean, welcoming and not overly expensive.

If you want any specific information on where we stayed and the route we took please let me know.
Thank you. One of our dogs is a tad deranged (Border collie) so I'm not sure we want to be in a car for longer than needs biggrin but I think a small detour will certainly make the trip more interesting. Great, I'll have a look at the Accor website. We haven't decided on a vehicle either ... I'm struggling to work out how we'd sqeeze 2 x adults, 2 x roadbikes 2 x dogs and 2 x snowboards etc into the E63 s estate, so may need to take a van from work which will be less interesting to drive on those roads.

Phil.

5,570 posts

269 months

Friday 14th November
quotequote all
Seriously consider the Portsmouth to Saint Malo crossing. There are dog friendly cabins. It takes about 6 hours and cuts out the M25/M20 (which can be a nightmare both ways) plus a chunk of northern France. Gives you a break too.

Last time I drove to our place in Southern Spain from the Midlands it took about 24hrs of driving, 12hrs over 2 days shared driving with one stop near Bordeaux. It was a lot, and without dogs, so suggest 3 days is reasonable.

The Michelin route planner is useful and includes tolls: https://www.viamichelin.co.uk/

Best to avoid Paris,Barcelona and Valencia, instead head for San Sebastián, Burgos, Madrid. But don’t arrive near Madrid on Friday afternoon as everyone was escaping for the weekend like we did smile

Get a toll badge. Something like Blip&Go which takes about 10 days to a week to arrive. It costs a few euro a month buy only when you use it and the toll costs are the same. It saves a lot of time over a long journey. https://www.viamichelin.co.uk/

Have a great journey.

durbster

11,571 posts

241 months

Friday 14th November
quotequote all
I drove to Spain and back in the summer with the dog and I just slept at the French rest stops. They're generally excellent.

I dunno if you know Paris but I wouldn't want to be tackling that in the middle of the day. I drove through it at 6am there and 3am on the way back and even with little to no traffic, it was still a total nightmare trying to figure out which lane to be in and which exits to take, let alone the insane junctions that have no logical structure, speed cameras, and spooky tunnels.

I'd definitely recommend getting the tags for France and Spain. They're superb and save a lot of farting about that you don't need on a long drive. I found the Spanish toll roads were nowhere near as frequent as in France (for the bit I did at least, about an hour down the coast from Barcelona).

Voodoo Blue

1,060 posts

164 months

Friday 14th November
quotequote all
JEA1K said:
Thank you. One of our dogs is a tad deranged (Border collie) so I'm not sure we want to be in a car for longer than needs biggrin but I think a small detour will certainly make the trip more interesting. Great, I'll have a look at the Accor website. We haven't decided on a vehicle either ... I'm struggling to work out how we'd sqeeze 2 x adults, 2 x roadbikes 2 x dogs and 2 x snowboards etc into the E63 s estate, so may need to take a van from work which will be less interesting to drive on those roads.
No problem, dogs can sometimes be a bit of a nightmare on long journeys smile

One other piece of advice I'd offer if your planning on using the tunnel is go over on a late crossing and stay overnight near Calais. We've been doing this for years with or without the dogs as it's usually a lot quieter so no queues, you can have a meal and relax in the evening and then enjoy a good breakfast and fresh start in the morning. It really sets the trip up nicely and does away with the frantic rush on day 1.

S100HP

13,444 posts

186 months

Friday 14th November
quotequote all
Stupid comment time, but are you aware of the Animal Health Certificate requirements post Brexit?

JEA1K

Original Poster:

2,648 posts

242 months

S100HP said:
Stupid comment time, but are you aware of the Animal Health Certificate requirements post Brexit?
Yes, they're book in for these in a week or so ... already had the rabbies jabs. The return journey worming tablets are a bit of a faff ... 24-120hr window to travel home in :-/

JEA1K

Original Poster:

2,648 posts

242 months

Thanks all for the advice, some great ideas ... I'm not expecting to enjoy the journey, merely just be as painless/stress free as poss wink

Phil.

5,570 posts

269 months

JEA1K said:
Yes, they're book in for these in a week or so ... already had the rabbies jabs. The return journey worming tablets are a bit of a faff ... 24-120hr window to travel home in :-/
If you have an address in Spain you can get a pet passport much cheaper than the UK.

durbster

11,571 posts

241 months

Phil. said:
JEA1K said:
Yes, they're book in for these in a week or so ... already had the rabbies jabs. The return journey worming tablets are a bit of a faff ... 24-120hr window to travel home in :-/
If you have an address in Spain you can get a pet passport much cheaper than the UK.
The Spanish vet we used told us you can get one even if you don't have a Spanish address. Not sure I believed them mind, and I wouldn't fancy finding out at the border...

JEA1K

Original Poster:

2,648 posts

242 months

durbster said:
Phil. said:
JEA1K said:
Yes, they're book in for these in a week or so ... already had the rabbies jabs. The return journey worming tablets are a bit of a faff ... 24-120hr window to travel home in :-/
If you have an address in Spain you can get a pet passport much cheaper than the UK.
The Spanish vet we used told us you can get one even if you don't have a Spanish address. Not sure I believed them mind, and I wouldn't fancy finding out at the border...
Yes, we were going to contact a vet in Spain ... the AHC's are £300 per visit and whilst the next visit should be permanent for them, it might make life easier.

RESSE

5,944 posts

240 months

We have had many great trips from Shropshire to Costa Blanca with our Jackadoodle.

The old Pet Passport was perfect and I read these maybe coming back?


JEA1K

Original Poster:

2,648 posts

242 months

Yesterday (11:52)
quotequote all
RESSE said:
We have had many great trips from Shropshire to Costa Blanca with our Jackadoodle.

The old Pet Passport was perfect and I read these maybe coming back?
Yes our vet told us this although no idea as to when.

Rob 131 Sport

4,093 posts

71 months

Yesterday (13:17)
quotequote all
JEA1K said:
We're going to take our dogs down to Spain next month as we're planning a 3 week ish trip. We're up in York, so looks like its 25 hours without stops, so we'll do this over a couple of days.

Rough plan us to leave York early hours, get a 6am chunnel crossing and do a long first day around Poitiers for the first night in a hotel. Day 2 drive from Poitiers to Burgos area with another overnight stay before heading to Nerja from Burgos. Had orginally planned one night stop but I think 15 hours each day will be a bit much.

Looks like most of the Ibis hotels are pet friendly, I just wanted to see who's done similar journeys with their dogs before and any pointers as to where to stay?
I’ve stayed in a number of IBIS Styles in France over the past few years when travelling and didn’t realise they were pet friendly. I’ll now know to avoid them.

Staying in a hotel room after a dog has slept there just doesn’t bear thinking about.

Rushjob

2,244 posts

277 months

Yesterday (13:25)
quotequote all
JEA1K said:
durbster said:
Phil. said:
JEA1K said:
Yes, they're book in for these in a week or so ... already had the rabbies jabs. The return journey worming tablets are a bit of a faff ... 24-120hr window to travel home in :-/
If you have an address in Spain you can get a pet passport much cheaper than the UK.
The Spanish vet we used told us you can get one even if you don't have a Spanish address. Not sure I believed them mind, and I wouldn't fancy finding out at the border...
Yes, we were going to contact a vet in Spain ... the AHC's are £300 per visit and whilst the next visit should be permanent for them, it might make life easier.
If you do obtain an EU pet passport under no circumstances allow a non EU vet to update the rabies jab entires. Tapeworm. etc is OK but not rabies, it will invalidate the passport.